Monday, October 24, 2022

Wood Pellet Production from Acacia Industrial Plantation Forest (HTI) Waste

Acacia forests or plantations in Indonesia are estimated to reach 2 million hectares and almost all of these acacia forests are used to supply pulp and paper mills. Every pulp and paper mill always has acacia forest with an area of ​​​​thousands of hectares to meet the pulp and paper mill. Acacia wood with a minimum diameter of 8 cm is used as the raw material, while those with a diameter smaller than that are only used as waste. After the tree is cut down, then a new planting is carried out (replanting). If every one hectare produces 20 tons of acacia wood waste, then with an area of ​​20,000 hectares, 400,000 tons of acacia wood waste is produced. The area of ​​20,000 hectares of acacia plantations is not too big, this is because there are a number of HTI (industrial plantation forest) concession holders which cover an area of ​​hundreds of thousands of hectares, so the volume of wood waste produced is also very large. The wood waste is very potential for the production of wood pellets. The need for wood pellets is also increasing along with the decarbonization program or fossil fuel substitution.

Wood products come from different parts of the tree, each tree has a unique potential, depending on a number of factors including the diameter and straightness of the trunk. In acacia trees trunk diameter is the main parameter.

For the production of wood pellets, you can use raw materials from wood waste or wood that worth of waste wood. This is why wood that is valuable or has a high economy is not suitable for the production of wood pellets (from an economic point of view). Users of wood pellets are mainly for power plants so that the volume of their needs is large. Waste wood such as from acacia plantations is very potential and suitable for the production of large capacity wood pellets. In addition to Japan and Korea as the largest wood pellet market in Asia, currently Europe is also increasingly being encouraged to use wood pellets. The occurrence of the Russia-Ukraine war was one of the driving forces. The dependence on fossil fuels from Russia has become a concern for European countries in particular, so that the urge to use renewable energy is getting bigger. Biomass, especially wood pellets, also has a large portion in the plan to use renewable energy in Europe, especially in the RED (Renewable Energy Directive) II. Even in the current war conditions, the need for wood pellets for space heating is also getting bigger, although for this segment, especially firewood is their main fuel. With the disruption of energy supply from Russia, it is predicted that this winter will be a tough winter in Europe.

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